Monday, March 18, 2013



Update: "LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST"
PRESENTED BY REDUXION THEATER
AT METRO LIBRARIES FULL PLAY

Reduxion Theater will present the full play of Shakespeare's "Love's Labours Lost," not a shortened 45 minute production
as previously reported. All play times are 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on
Saturdays at the Metropolitan Libraries on:

  March 23: Ralph Ellison Library, 1918 NE 23rd (424-1437)

 March 30: Midwest City Library, 8143 E. Reno (732-4828)

 April 6: Northwest Library, 5600 NW 122nd (606-3580)

 April 13: Belle Isle Library, 5501 N. Villa (843-9601)

                 
                 
                 

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Mini Review:

OCU'S SPRING REVIEW
WELL WORTH SEEING

By Nancy Condit


Oklahoma City University's Spring Show is filled with the tremendous energy of a spectacle, great tapping, lifts, and a lyrical Broadway style ballet wrapped up into a show that is well worth seeing.

Final shows are at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday, March 16.  Reserved seat tickets are $20 from the Oklahoma City University Performing Arts Ticket Office by calling (405) 208-5227 from noon to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, or online at www.okcu.edu/ticketoffice.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013



SHAKESPEARE'S “LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST”
PRESENTED AT MLS LIBRARIES
BY REDUXION THEATRE


Poster provided

            "Love's Labours Lost," a "vibrant comedy of romance, requited and otherwise," will be performed, free, at seven Metropolitan Library System locations in March and April.   Reduxion Theatre has placed the drama in twentieth century Spain, with absurdist comedy, and period music. This is a briefer, but true to the original, version of the full length play.
“It’s Shakespeare for everybody,” said MLS Director of Outreach Services Dana Morrow in a press release.  “The play is about the King of Navarre who, with three of his friends, decides to devote three years to study and to ignore all women during that time.  You can imagine how long that lasts.  It is full of puns and comical wordplay, and was first performed in 1597 for Queen Elizabeth I.  She liked it.  So will you.”
Photo provided
For more information about this or any Metropolitan Library System program, visit the  
MLS website, www.metrolibrary.org.

All performances are free and will be on Saturday afternoons beginning at 1:00p.m.

                 March 2: Southern Oaks Library, 6900 S. Walker (631-4468)

                 March 9: Downtown Library, 300 Park Avenue (231-8650)

                 March 16: Edmond Library, 10 S. Boulevard (341-9282)

                 March 23: Ralph Ellison Library, 1918 NE 23rd (424-1437)

                 March 30: Midwest City Library, 8143 E. Reno (732-4828)

                 April 6: Northwest Library, 5600 NW 122nd (606-3580)

                 April 13: Belle Isle Library, 5501 N. Villa (843-9601)


From the press release and poster



Monday, March 11, 2013



Brightmusic Society of Oklahoma  -
Concert 4 of Tenth Anniversary Season –
“Bright Tales”

Guest artist Miles Hoffman, artistic director
of the American Chamber Players.
Photo provided

On March 18-19, 2013, Oklahoma City’s own Brightmusic Chamber Ensemble will present two performances of the fourth concert of its Tenth Anniversary Season, “Bright Tales.”  Our guest artist for this concert will be violist Miles Hoffman, Artistic Director of the American Chamber Players; Associate Professor of Viola at Converse College in Spartanburg, South Carolina; and Music Commentator for National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition.”             

The works on the program are: (1) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s “Kegelstatt” Trio in E-flat Major, K.498 for viola, clarinet and piano; (2) Max Bruch’s Romance for Viola and Piano in F Major, op. 85; (3) Robert Schumann’s “Märchenerzählungen” (“Fairy Tales”), op. 132 for viola, clarinet and piano; and (4) Guillaume Lekeu’s Piano Quartet in B Minor for violin, viola, cello and piano.

Guest Artist Miles Hoffman is founder, violist and Artistic Director of the American Chamber Players, an outgrowth of his nine years’ service as the director of the Library of Congress Summer Chamber Festival, which he founded. He is the author of The NPR Classical Music Companion, now in its tenth printing.    

Four Brightmusic musicians will appear with Mr. Hoffman on this concert:  Gregory Lee (violin), Jonathan Ruck (cello), Chad Burrow (clarinet) and Amy I-Lin Cheng (piano).  

Four works will be performed. Mozart’s “Kegelstatt” has been called “dense and cerebral” – “one of his most perfectly integrated compositions, with [a balanced] interplay among the three instruments” [All Music Guide]. German romanticist Bruch’s Romance for Viola and Piano in F Major, op. 85, is conservative in form and harmony, but reflects “deep thoughtfulness and melodic richness” [David Duball]. Schumann’s “Märchenerzählungen” (“Fairy Tales”), Guillaume Lekue, Piano Quartet in B Minor (for violin, viola, cello and piano), completed by Vincent d’Indy after Lekue’s death.  His best-known work is a violin sonata commissioned by Eugène Ysaÿe, premiered less than a year before Lekue died of typhoid fever contracted from a contaminated sorbet, one day after his 24th birthday.  He began to work on his Piano Quartet in late 1892, but he had not finished it when he died.  His friend and teacher d’Indy completed the second movement.  Lekue intended the Quartet to be a grand work, probably in three movements.  It will be, he said, “a thing of beauty [and] audacity, beside which my violin sonata will be but a penny toy.”  Lekue would have been gratified by the words of critic Jerry Dubins, who has described the first movement as an “outpouring of emotions so intense, so personal, so private, and so painful it almost hurts to listen to it,” and the second movement as a work of “heart-throbbing sadness and breathtaking beauty inexpressible in words.”

The first performance will take place on Monday, March 18th at 7:30 pm in northwest OKC, at All Souls’ Episcopal Church, 6400 N. Pennsylvania Avenue, and the second on Tuesday, March 19th at 7:30 pm in downtown OKC at St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, 127 NW 7th Street.  Admission is $10 per adult; students and Season Members are free of charge.  A reception with the musicians will follow each performance.

Brightmusic is on the Web at www.brightmusic.org

From the press release




OCU'S SPRING SHOW CELEBRATES
BROADWAY, SAINT PATRICK'S DAY,
AND OKC WRITER RALPH ELLISON


Photo provided
        The American Spirit Dance Company, founded and directed by Professor Jo Rowan, will bring rapid-fire tap, jazz and musical theatre dance back to the Kirkpatrick Auditorium stage at Oklahoma City University March 14, 15 and 16.  
“This is the fast-paced show of the year,” said director Jo Rowan in a press release, noting that the audience will see dancers trained and skilled in multiple styles of American musical theatre dance, the foundation of all Broadway shows.
The acclaimed company of dancers from Oklahoma City University’s Ann Lacy School of American Dance and Arts Management will celebrate an early Saint Patrick’s Day with Rowan’s emotionally compelling Irish Bitter Suite, a collection of six dances covering Irish immigration to America due to famine and political repression ending with an uplifting and hopeful performance of “God Bless America” as the Irish find freedom and opportunity as new Americans.
The American Spirit dancers will also celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of Oklahoma native and novelist Ralph Ellison with the Ellison Loves Ellington Suite, featuring dances to a trio of some of Duke Ellington’s most beloved music.
Photo provided
“The show presents dynamic entertainment that is perfect for the entire family, from grandpa to the grandkids,” Rowan stated. “There are high energy numbers and powerful tap numbers to keep the performers – and the audience – on their toes, along with beautiful and colorful costumes and computer controlled moving lights.”
The 140 member company, which has been a “seed bed” for professional performers all over the world, will take audience members to the beaches of Rio de Janeiro, flying around with a wacky pilot and beautiful stewardesses of the ‘60’s, and back to the “good ole days” of travel by train.
Show times are 8 p.m. March 14 and 15, and 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. March 16.  Reserved seat tickets are $20 from the Oklahoma City University Performing Arts Ticket Office by calling (405) 208-5227 from noon to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, or online at www.okcu.edu/ticketoffice.
From the press release

Wednesday, March 6, 2013



MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN
TALK CANCELLED

Marian Wright Edelman's talk scheduled for tonight at Oklahoma City University
has been cancelled because of illness. The talk will be rescheduled if possible.

Friday, March 1, 2013


[ARTSPACE] at UNTITLED
HOSTS CURATORIAL
COLLABORATION
GALLERY TALK
SATURDAY


Photo from Untitled
Saturday, March 2nd at 3pm, Untitled will host a gallery talk with Plug Projects team Cory Imig, Amy Kligman, Caitlin Horsmon, Misha Klingman and Caleb Taylor. Currently in town curating OVAC's Momentum show, Plug Projects is a curatorial collaboration by these five Kansas City, MO artists who share the mission of bringing fresh perspectives and conversation to the local art community. Their goal is to energize artists and the public at large by exhibiting challenging new work, initiating critical dialogue, and expanding connections of artists in Kansas City as part of a wider, national network of artists.

They will discuss their work, which is currently receiving national attention for their efforts in bringing artists to the region.

Admission is free and open to the public. [ARTSPACE] at UNTITLED is at 1 N.E. 3rd Street. Their

phone number is 815.9995.

From the email